Reflective photography

ABSTRACT

Reflective Photography produces prints that make the objects photographed completely unrecognizable. A thin sheet of undulating polyester film is photographed. The objects placed in front and indirectly photographed produce an impressionistic print.

The invention named in this application can only be described as something that can be produced in various Staging Areas suitable for photography. In other words, one size or location does not fit all situations. The Staging Area can be either indoors or outdoors. Natural light out of doors generally would be sufficient during the day. However, while photographing indoors it undoubtedly would require artificial lighting to suit the photographer's needs, all based on the size of the Staging Area

Basic are the following items needed to produce Reflective Photographs: A digital camera, of any type or model, not a movie camera; a table, a sturdy chest or plastic storage container on which to place the camera, or a tripod. A sheet of high performance, clear polyester film or similar sheeting. A solid wall to which the film sheet is loosely attached with duct tape that fits the size of the film sheet where the wall color is immaterial.

When photographing indoors, a fan is required of proper strength set at a place appropriate to create undulating movement of the polyester film. When photographing out of doors, photography would generally require a warm day rather than a cold day on which there was sufficient wind coming from a proper direction to pass under the film sheet to produce the desired undulating effect.

The target material that will be indirectly photographed consists of a variety of household objects; i.e., a watering can, clay or plastic pots containing flower plants with solid or multi-colored leaves, a dust pan and broom, dish towels, multi-colored seat cushions, a baseball cap; gloves, ceramic figurine, and any other object or objects similar in size or shape to those named that are generally multi-colored. Solid colored objects can also be intermingled whenever there is sufficient wind effect to distort their image. The Target material used can be two dimensional or three dimensional.

Keep in mind that larger staging areas could contain larger target material. What is important here is that the target objects be such that their image is distorted on the undulating film when the picture is taken. I have not ventured into testing various sized staging areas, only the one used in this patent application.

The polyester film sheet is attached with pieces of duct tape to the various sides of the solid back wall. The tape attachment is spaced to permit a strong flow of air from the wind source available, allowing the passage of air under the film to produce an undulating effect on the film sheet. With a proper location out of doors, on a porch or deck that has an open railing next to the attached film sheet, the wind will generally provide sufficient air movement under the film sheet to keep it undulating. If no wind, then no results as desired. In my illustration the target objects named herein are placed a short distance, twelve to twenty-four inches, in front of the film with the camera placed directly above and to the rear of the array of objects.

With a proper flow of air coming in through the railing a picture is taken of the undulating view that is projected from the target objects as they appear on the undulating film. The resulting print will show a distorted, abstract, unidentifiable view of the target objects. A variety of pictures will result by rearranging the same target objects or adding other target objects and taking additional pictures. The results are phenomenal.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

Not Applicable

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH or DEVELOPMENT

The inventor is not employed nor associated with any federally sponsored research and development organization, nor are there any co-inventors or businesses, charitable or otherwise, involved in this patent application.

REFERENCE to SEQUENCE LISTING

Not Applicable

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The field of endeavor is entirely photography using a digital camera. Prior to my development of Reflective Photography an artist would generally be involved for a considerable length of time, first to formulate an idea about producing a picture that would be representational of nothing ever seen before in nature. e.g., an abstract painting. A laborious process followed in which selected colors of paint would be applied one at a time by one method or another to a canvas or other material. From a number of these paintings, copies of which I have retained, hardly a one of them can match the subliminal images that can be produced almost instantly with a digital camera in a Staging Area, along with the simple household objects that I have used in my work. What has gone before is nothing more than primitive art in abstract painting. Others, to obtain abstract images have placed wet paint on a canvas laying on a floor and let an animal, cat or dog, walk around on the wet surface, or use a snake to crawl over the surface to produce odd, abstract images. What I am doing with Reflective Photography will displace the laborious, unattractive activity of these artists for another reason and that is, my photographs can be enlarged to almost any dimension once the image is removed from the digital camera and stored in a computer.

To my knowledge, there are no references to specific documents, which are related to my invention as I am the first person, apparently, who has ever attempted the use of REFLECTIVE PHOTOGRAPHY.

BRIEF SUMMARY of the INVENTION

Reflective Photography will bring this form of artistic progress into the twenty-first century by utilizing a device, the digital camera which can very quickly produce a product that transcends what has gone before in abstract art. The invention of the digital camera more than one hundred fifty years ago caused portrait painting to be limited to the very wealthy or to senior officials in stable governments. No one else could afford the time spent while a painter took days and weeks to produce a finished product. Now, Reflective Photography will displace or reduce the popularity of another branch of art, abstract painting. Cost alone will also serve to reduce the production of laborious, unattractive abstract painting.

Photography itself has brought artistic development and display out of the museums and made it a source of enjoyment for people at all financial levels. My invention will continue that progress of bringing art enjoyment to a greater number of people.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION of the SEVERAL VIEWS of the DRAWING (PHOTOGRAPHS)

The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawings will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.

A petition is hereby made to submit three sets of photographs in lieu of drawings or black and white photographs in this Utility Patent Application. An additional fee of $130 is included under 37 CFR §1.17(h), Fee code 1464. Abstract color photography is at the heart of this patent application. The objects to be indirectly photographed must be those that show a variety of color and ultimate distortion. The resultant pictures produced by Reflective Photography have no essence without a great variety of color. Drawings cannot begin to enable a person to comprehend where and how the resultant pictures were produced. And an undulating film sheet cannot possibly be drawn to enable someone to comprehend its potential use nor can a black and white picture produce intelligible results.

A further request is made to provide landscape shaped photos. A spread is needed to portray the Staging Area (Print 1/6) in its best view as well as some of the other scenes. The labeling would be more obtrusive in Print 5/6 had it been shown in portrait form.

This invention patent request requires color pictures to discern a superior level of the finished product. See Print 6/6. A submission for patent approval could not possibly depict this process clearly in black and white or with drawings. The purpose of this invention is to eliminate the need for drawings rather than utilize them.

Views of the Reflective Photography Staging Area and some other necessary paraphernalia:

Print 1/6. The entire Staging Area is shown laterally.

Print 2/6. The undulating polyester film screen (2B) is shown in a frontal view attached to a solid backing wall (2A).

Print 3/6. The location of the digital camera (3A).

Print 4/6 The railing area (4B) through which a strong air flow fitters in to enter between the polyester film screen and the backing wall. Also shown is the duct tape (4A) attached to the polyester film screen and the backing wall.

Print 5/6. The types and location of various objects to be used in the pictures. Items shown are: potted plants (5A), ball cap (5B), watering can (5C), rubbish container (5D), dish cloth (5E), ceramic figurine (5F), colorful print (5G), plastic dust pan (5H).

Print 6/6. An abstract resulting print of Reflective Photography. Phenomenal!

The best mode of carrying out my invention is to display the work in such a way that the public will recognize its enduring artistic value.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The discovery was purely accidental of this all new method of camera use that I have named Reflective Photography. There was no development period whatsoever. To explain, a sheet of polyester film had come loose from the solid wall backing in what has become the Staging Area on the deck of my residence, see Print 1/6. This particular film sheet, one of four pieces, 25×50 inches, came loose shortly after its installation. To keep the film sheet from separating from the backing wall, I attached to the backing wall and the film sheet pieces of duct tape, (Print 4/6) at intervals along the various sides of the film sheet.

From time-to-time a strong breeze would blow through the railing, (4B) seen in Print 4/6. The resultant air would infiltrate under the loose film sheet (2B) causing it to undulate.

Upon noticing this phenomenon, I placed a camera, (3A) on a plastic container approximately four feet in front of the undulating film sheet. The resulting picture, see Print 6/6 shows the results—AN ALL NEW PROCESS OF PHOTOGRAPHY WAS BORN! The picture on print 6/6 even has a name, Cypress.

The development of the Staging Area was very easy for this process as almost all necessary parts were in place therein on the deck of my residence. It was just a matter of placing a digital camera, (3A) in a location that would enable me to determine what would be the results of a photo taken of this undulating film screen.

Ultimately, a color printer attached to a computer is necessary to produce the image or images once the digital images are stored in the computer from this method of photography. Further, it requires a person capable of setting up the Staging Area with all the components already mentioned who is capable of using a digital camera, a computer and a color printer. The resultant prints can be produced on almost any type of paper from plain ordinary copy paper to various types of glossy paper. 

1. What is claimed by Reflective Photography is that it is an entirely new process to produce abstract prints (Print 6/6) never seen before. A Staging Area (Print 1/6) must be developed where a free flow of strong air coming through a deck railing (Print 4/6) enters into the Staging Area (Print 1/6) where it can affect the movement of a translucent, polyester film sheet (Print 2/6).
 2. A Backing wall (2A) partially shown exposed below the polyester film sheet (2B) is used to hold the loosely attached polyester film sheet In Print 2/6. Pieces of duct tape (4A) attach the film sheet (Print 2/6) at intervals to the backing wall. The duct tape attachment (4A) is placed, firstly, to allow the film sheet (2B) to hang loosely from the backing wall, (2A) and, secondly, to allow a strong flow of air to enter into the Staging Area (Print 1/6), passing through the railing (4B) and then entering between the backing wall and the loosely attached film sheet. Unfortunately, this air motion cannot be shown pictorially. However it is the ESSENCE of Reflective Photography. That fact is what must be understood. The rapid airflow passing behind the film sheet creates the delusional aspect on the film sheet that results in an abstract photo, (Print 6/6). The delusional aspect is achieved by the fact that the household objects (Print 5/6) indirectly photographed, can no longer be identified' in the finished print. A more important reason that a viewer would be unable to identify the objects pictured is simply that the person or persons would not be present at the time the picture is taken.
 3. A digital camera (Print 3/6) is located in the rear of the Staging Area (Print 1/6) or what is to the left side in the picture labeled Print 1/6. It is focused on the undulating film sheet surface (2B), Almost any variety of various colored objects called household objects (an array of these objects is shown in Print 5/6 and described in Section 1, SPECIFICATION). These objects are placed on the Staging Area floor (Print 1/6) or on rear-placed objects or containers so that their images will reflect on the film screen (2B) with the digital camera (Print 3/6) placed on a table or container (Print 3/6) slightly above and to the rear of the household objects (Print 5/6) whose images will be indirectly photographed on the undulating film.
 4. No two pictures will ever be the same resulting from the film's continuous motion. With this all new method of photography, laborious and lengthy abstract painting processes would be almost outdated and unproductive. There is no limit to the variety or the size of the finished product resulting from Reflective Photography, once the images are transmitted from a digital camera to a computer and copies are printed. 